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Transgender male YouTuber says 'it can be quite hard to navigate having periods as a guy'
Image source: YouTube screenshot

Transgender male YouTuber says 'it can be quite hard to navigate having periods as a guy'

Jamie Raines also complains that advertising and packaging for sanitary products 'are very female orientated"

Jamie Raines — a transgender male YouTuber — told PinkNews UK that "it can be quite hard to navigate having periods as a guy when everything to do with periods is aimed very much towards women."

Raines noted in a video for PinkNews that "trans men can experience periods, and nonbinary people can as well" and that "transgender men are real men — we're just born a little bit different to other guys."

Raines stopped having periods after starting testosterone about seven years ago — but three years into the treatment the periods resumed during a testosterone medication switch, the video noted.

The YouTube figure called the resumed periods an "incredibly, very unwelcome guest."

History

Raines recalled that between the ages of 12 and 14 when periods started "I felt very down" and that they "took me completely by shock."

Image source: YouTube screenshot

Periods became a "massive source of dysphoria for me," Raines — who's had "top surgery" — added.

Image source: YouTube screenshot

And when they returned during the YouTube figure's testosterone switch, Raines said it was "straight back to that very dysphoric feeling that I had years ago."

"I just remember, again, being stuck on the toilet crying, just not knowing what to do," Raines noted, adding that "it just kind of like shook me."

However, the YouTuber added that "being further along in my transition" helped in getting over having resumed periods for a brief time.

Oh, and Raines has at least one complaint about sanitary products — namely that "the advertising and packaging are very female orientated."

Jamie Raines: Having periods as transgender manyoutu.be

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